Slider

Slider

ATP! Interview: Vinyl Theatre

Vinyl Theatre’s Keegan Calmes is as chipper as he can be on a long van ride back
from Virginia to the band’s home territory in Milwaukee, Wisconsin, answering the
phone with a bright, “Hi, how are you doing?” After the 2014 the band had, he has all
the reason in the world to be happy—even while crammed in a van for hours on
end.

2014 saw the band releasing their debut album, Electrogram, touring with Fueled by
Ramen label mates twenty one pilots, and then having their own headlining tour.
“It feels really good. It feels like that first stepping stone is out of the way, sort of,”
Calmes says. “It went really quite flawlessly with twenty one pilots being on the
same label. They kind of took us under their wing and showed us the way on our
first major tour.”
The band started when Calmes started writing with Vinyl Theatre’s keyboard player
in high school and college. They kept writing together throughout college and met
their drummer that way as well. After college was over, they dove right in and got
whatever job they could to support them while they tried to pursue music full-time.
Now, the goal is to just keep putting out albums and staying with it for the long haul.
This isn’t a band that’s going to have one album and decide to leave music.

“I feel like as a band, we ultimately just want to keep growing and put out a really
good lineup of records, each record being a little bit more distinctly different from
the last,” Calmes says.

When it comes to influences and inspirations, Calmes says that he and his band
mates are like “human sponges,” absorbing just about everything to incorporate into
their own music.

Vinyl Theatre is inspired by everyone from modern bands similar to them, like
twenty one pilots and Paramore, to EDM like Cascade and deadmau5, to older,
classic rock bands like Supertramp and Rush. Each member of the band brings their
own influences, and they all come together to create the sound of Vinyl Theatre.
They’re trying to switch their sound up and do something a bit different from the
other bands you’re used to hearing in this genre.

“If anybody hears our music and thinks it stands out, I feel like maybe it’s the energy
that we put into it. If they see a show, we definitely exude the same energy that you
hear in the music,” Calmes says.

The band are doing some college shows in the spring, a show in Chicago with New
Politics, and a hometown release party for a local radio station that’s creating their
own beer. It was also just announced that they’re going on a spring tour with Magic
Man. Calmes says if they could pick anyone to tour with, though, it would be
Paramore or Fall Out Boy because “they’re super amazing legends” and since they’ve
been around for so long, Vinyl Theatre could learn a lot from them.

Calmes is excited for the start to 2015, and emphasizes how ready the band is to be
back on tour and getting to see their fans.

“Hopefully the fans can be patient and wait to see us, because we’re dying to see
them as well,” Calmes says.